Clare said before she could stop herself.
The dark eyes raked her. ‘She seems to have taken you fully into her confidence.’
Clare met his gaze steadily. ‘Sometimes it’s easier to talk to a stranger. Someone you’ll never see again.’ She paused. ‘Talking of which, I hope I’m free to go now.’
‘Of course.’
‘Oh, I’m taking nothing for granted.’ Not until I’ve put at least a hundred kilometres between us, she added silently.
‘I regret that your vacation has been interrupted so unpleasantly. Do you intend to journey on to Cenacchio?’
‘I’m not sure what my plans are,’ Clare said guardedly. Whatever, she wasn’t prepared to share them, especially with an Italian aristocrat who seemed to regard the rest of creation as so many puppets to dance to his tug on the strings.
He picked up her bag and replaced the items that had fallen out, with the exception of her passport, which he opened and studied for a moment.
Then he looked at her, his lips twisting in a faint smile. He said softly, ‘Your photograph does not do you justice—Chiara.’
It had been a long time since anyone had used the Italian version of her name. Not since her mother…
Clare bit her lip hard, staring rigidly at the table.
There’d been an odd note in his voice, she realised. Something disturbing—even sensuous—that had prickled along her nerve-endings.
‘Would you like to see Paola?’ he went on in the same quiet tone. ‘I am sure she would wish to thank you.’
The walls of the room seemed to be contracting strangely, startling her with a sudden vivid awareness of his proximity to her. A troubling certainty that she was in more danger now than she had been all day. Or even ever before.
She thought, I’ve got to get out of here—away from here…
She forced a stiff little smile. ‘I’d prefer to leave things as they are. Please tell her I said goodbye—and good luck,’ she added deliberately. ‘I think she’s going to need it.’
He smiled back at her. ‘Oh, I think we all make our own good fortune—don’t you?’
‘I—I haven’t given it much thought.’ She put out her hand. ‘May I have my bag, please?’
For an uneasy moment she was sure he was going to make her reach out and take it from him.
But he passed it across the table to her without comment. He had good hands, she noted without pleasure, with square, capable palms and long fingers. Strong, powerful hands. But, she wondered, could they also be gentle…?
She caught herself hastily. She couldn’t afford to indulge in that kind of speculation. It simply wasn’t safe.
Guido Bartaldi wasn’t safe, she thought, making a play of checking the contents of her bag.
‘You will find everything there.’ He sounded amused.
‘As I said, I’m taking nothing for granted.’ She found her watch, and fastened it back on to her wrist, her fingers clumsy with haste as she struggled with the clasp.
‘May I help?’
‘No—no, thank you,’ she said hastily. The thought of him touching her, even in such a brief asexual contact, was enough to bring warm colour into her face. She kept her head bent as she completed the fastening.
And then something else in her bag attracted her attention, and she stiffened.
‘Just a moment.’ She extracted an envelope. ‘This isn’t mine.’
‘Open it.’
The envelope contained money—lira notes in large denominations. Getting on for a thousand pounds, she thought numbly.
She looked up and met his expressionless gaze. She said, ‘What is this? Some kind of set-up?’
‘On the contrary,’ he returned. ‘Let us call it a tangible expression of my regret for the inconvenience you have suffered.’
‘Of course,’ she said. ‘The rich man’s solution for everything. Throw money at it.’
‘I had hoped,’ he said, ‘that it might make you look more kindly on me.’
Clare shook her head. ‘I’m sorry, signore.’ She kept her voice clipped and cool. ‘You may have bought the local police force, but my goodwill isn’t for sale. Not now. Not ever.’
The notes tore quite easily. As Guido Bartaldi watched her, motionless and silent, Clare ripped them across, and across, reducing them savagely to the most expensive confetti in the world, then tossing the fragments into the air.
She said, ‘Consider all debts cancelled, Marchese,’ then she walked swiftly round the table and past him to the door. The handle was slippery in her damp hand, but she managed to twist it and get the door open.
At any moment she was expecting him to stop her physically from leaving. Waiting for his anger to strike her like lightning over the Appenines. Apart from anything else, defacing a national currency was probably some kind of offence.
But there wasn’t a sound behind her, or a movement. Only a stillness and a silence that was ominous in its totality. That followed her like a shadow. But ahead of her was another open door and a sunlit street, and she kept walking, trying not to break into a run.
‘Signorina.’ An officer came out of one of the offices that lined the corridor, and she swung round in panic, feeling a scream rising in her throat, until she realised he was simply telling her where her car was parked.
She managed to choke out a word of thanks, and went on, aware of curious glances following her.
She found the little Fiat, and got in to the driving seat. For a moment, she stared blindly ahead of her through the windscreen, then she bent and put her head down on the steering wheel, and let the inevitable storm of weeping that had been building steadily over the past hour exorcise her shock and fright.
When it was over, she dried her eyes on a handful of tissues, put on some more lipstick, and started the car. The sooner she got on with her life and put today’s shambles out of her mind the better.
But it wasn’t so easy to do. She found she was constantly glancing in the mirror, her heart thumping each time a car came up behind her.
You’re being ridiculous, she told herself. It’s all over. You’ll never see him again.
So, why, in spite of the distance between them, was she conscious of his presence like the touch of a hand on her skin? And his voice saying softly, ‘Chiara’?
‘Mia cara.’ Violetta’s voice was like warm honey. ‘What a nightmare for you. Now, tell me everything. You were actually imprisoned?’
They were sitting in the salone, with the shutters drawn to exclude the late-afternoon sun, drinking the strong black coffee which Violetta consumed at all hours of the day and night and eating some little almond cakes.
‘Well, not in a cell,’ Clare admitted. The warmth and exuberance of her welcome both from her godmother and Angelina, her plump, smiling housekeeper, had been just what she’d needed to heal the wounds of the day. And, now, sitting in this calm, gracious room, able to pour her story into loving, sympathetic ears, she could feel the tension seeping out of her.
‘But it felt as bad.’ She shuddered. ‘I didn’t know what to do. I couldn’t think properly. I realise now why people confess to things they haven’t done.’ She frowned darkly. ‘And there was that wretched Guido Bartaldi behaving as if he owned the police station.’
‘Well,’ Violetta said with a tolerant shrug. ‘He is a great man in this region. His family have been here since the quattrocento.’ She lowered